Here is the second draft of the planning for this session.
The first draft was actually done on whiteboards at work. If they are still there when I get to work on Monday I'll take pictures and post them. I always try to show my progression as an insight into the process. It's hard work, but I think the process is as interesting as the presentation itself. After all for a 3 hour presentation there are generally at least 8 hours of work. If you don't enjoy the process then you are spending a lot of time doing something that is not fun.

Workshop on Entry:

Estimate the solution to two of the situations, show your work, NO CALCULATORS,
Be prepared to share how you found your answer:
15% tip on a bill of $32.65
10% discount on $452.63
40% increase in output of 2.5 tons
55% decrease in 12 sq. yards of material


Overview of 6 sub-domains of literacy:

Vocabulary Development

Reading Comprehension

Writing to Learn
Ways of representing math content- NAGS
Number
Algorithm
Graph
Sentences

Writing for Publication
WRITING to DEMONSTRATE LEARNING
Audience: teacher/assessor
Purpose: to show knowledge of content, concepts, or process
WRITING for PUBLICATION (pieces suitable for the writing portfolio assessment)
Audience: someone other than the teacher
Purpose: to accomplish a “real-world” task/objective


Fluency

Academic Dialogue


Reading in a Math Class:


-Write 3 Key Observations about the graph that you chose
-Like graphs break into small groups to share
-Pair with another graph to compare/contrast your findings
-Reflect whole group about the triangle activity (process here not content)

Hours Spent Playing Video Games

hours_watching_video_games.GIF

usa_today_wildfires_nearly_snuffed.JPG
usatoday_population_on_the_move.JPG

Discussion of Recommendations from national organizations:NCTM, Reading Next & National Math Panel


Instructional programs from pre-kindergarten through grade 12 should enable all students to—

(Principals and Standards for School Mathematics, NCTM, 2000, p. 60)

To Build Adolescent Literacy Skills:
  • Embed effective instructional principles into content learning
  • Apply motivating and self-directed learning strategies
  • Provide direct strategy instruction
  • Engage students in collaborative work around rigorous material and concepts
  • Use diverse texts
  • Implement an intensive cross-disciplinary writing approach
  • Provide extended time and opportunities for literacy work

  • Engage in professional development that is long-term and ongoing
  • Work in teams to plan for strategy use
  • Apply technology as a learning and literacy tool
  • Gather evidence about student skills, both formative and summative and respond to that evidence through appropriate instruction
  • Provide strategic intervention for those students who have specific learning difficulties

(Reading Next, Alliance for Excellent Education, 2004)

National Mathematics Advisory Panel

  • Scientific Knowledge on Learning and Cognition Needs to be Applied to the Classroom to Improve Student Achievement
  • The curriculum must simultaneously develop conceptual understanding, computational fluency, factual knowledge and problem solving skills.
  • Limitations in the ability to keep many things in mind (working-memory) can hinder mathematics performance.
    • Practice can offset this through automatic recall, which results in less information to keep in mind and frees attention for new aspects of material at hand.
    • Learning is most effective when practice is combined with instruction on related concepts.
    • Conceptual understanding promotes transfer of learning to new problems and better long-term retention.
Effective practice includes:
  • Explicit methods of instruction available on a regular basis
  • Clear problem solving models
  • Carefully orchestrated examples/ sequences of examples.
  • Concrete objects to understand abstract representations and notation.
  • Participatory thinking aloud by students and teachers.
(Foundations for Success, National Mathematics Advisory Panel, 2008)

Discussion of Routines & Structures in Math Classes


In small group discuss different routines that teachers might observe
Discuss how to support those routines through coaching